Running from 17 September until 12 October, The Smile is one of London Design Festival’s landmark projects for 2016 and can be inhabited and explored by the visiting public. The spectacular, curved, tubular timber structure measures 3.5m high, 4.5m wide and 34m long. The Smile has been designed to showcase the structural and spatial potential of cross-laminated American tulipwood.

Cross-laminated timber is itself a specifically designed and engineered timber, intended for use for both walls and floors. What makes it unique is its layered construction, with the wood fibres turned at right angles in each successive layer, creating a panel with strong support in both directions. Weight for weight, CLT is actually stronger than concrete!

“I wanted to create something that uses tulipwood CLT in its largest format possible,” says Alison Brooks on the design of The Smile “The best way to express this strength was to combine these plates into a four-sided CLT hollow tube. This is a beam profile that works very well in tension and compression to achieve long spans. By making this CLT ‘tube’ into the shape of an arc at a huge scale, the plates form a dynamic, sensory space to inhabit.”

The form of The Smile suggests a movability and implication that it will rock, which is an invitation to test whether the pavilion moves, and how it feels to walk in on a curved floor.

“A single door and ramp from the square invites visitors to enter – something like our archetypal image of Noah’s Ark,” says Alison “Inside the door light spilling from the ends of the arc will invite you to walk up the slope of the curve to balconies at either end, rather like looking out from the rail of a ship.”